OVER 100 KIDNAPPED NIGERIAN STUDENTS RELEASED: GOVERNMENT SPOKESMAN

Africa World

Sun 24 March 2024:

More than 130 students abducted by gunmen from a school in Nigeria earlier this month have been released “unharmed” days before a ransom deadline, say officials.

Government spokesman Abdulaziz Abdulaziz told Al Jazeera on Sunday that it “took a lot of backchannel engagement” to release the students abducted on March 7 in Kuriga, a dusty town in Kaduna state – the first mass kidnapping in Nigeria since 2021.

“[All] of them were released and all of them were fine,” he said, giving the official number of freed students at 137 – much lower than the figure of 286 students and one staff member in most media reports. He claimed the media reports were wrong, but did not give further details.

Earlier on Sunday, Uba Sani, governor of the northwestern state of Kaduna, said in a statement that the hostages were freed after “security operations” coordinated by the country’s national security adviser.

“We … thank all Nigerians who prayed fervently for the safe return of the school children. This is indeed a day of joy,” the governor said.

“The Nigerian Army also deserves special commendation for showing that with courage, determination and commitment, criminal elements can be degraded and security restored in our communities,” Sani added in a statement.

According to Kemi Okenyodo, executive director at Partners West Africa-Nigeria, an NGO, the discrepancy between the number of children reported to have been kidnapped and the number reportedly released on Sunday suggested “there was not a proper audit of the community to know how many children were kidnapped”.

She told Al Jazeera that schools in small towns are not set up like they are in major cities, with a fluid number of children coming to classes depending on the time of the day.

“However, no matter the situation, there ought to have been a proper audit,” Okenyodo stressed.

Abductions at Nigerian schools were first carried out by armed group Boko Haram, which seized 276 students from a girls’ school in Chibok in northeastern Borno state in 2014. Some of the girls have never been released, with most of them forcefully married to the fighters.

In another mass kidnapping in July 2021, gunmen took more than 150 students in a raid. The students were reunited months later with their families after they paid ransoms.

A total of some 1,400 children have been abducted since 2014.

SOURCE: INDEPENDENT PRESS AND NEWS AGENCIES

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